do file an appeal. what for? well, if for no other reason every time i file an appeal, i always lose. so going to the parole board is just like a waste of time. not really. well, it is to me. it seems like when it comes to bringing bad news, boy, they love bringing the bad news. but when it s good news, they don t like come, tell you, bringing you up for committee for good news, but only for bad news do they call you out. now, i i know it seems that way, but it really isn t. yeah, it is. you are not the one that has to sit in there, you know. i had all these plans of getting out. oh, damn. now i got to wait. okay. thank you. coming up, joe gets his new release date, but there s more bad news for him. we are going to be advising him that his primary parole plan was denied. he is going to be upset.
out your welcome, and i ve given you several chances, and i think a change of environment would do you good. you think so? okay. okay. all right. thank you very much. i knew it was coming. how do i feel? sad. it s not like i can say something to make her change her mind or anything. that s up to her. probably like she said, better off for me. it s july 1st, and today joe sanchez is finally going to be released on parole. we have one little minor issue with a possible open charge in valencia county. i need to ask him if he knows anything about it. valencia county is showing that you have an open case that hasn t been filed for aggravated assault. i don t have no cases there. everything s been dismissed. everything but what you served time for, right? yeah. all right. i ll get it straightened out.
because i ll never be out there. and to look out there would be to try to lust for something i ll never be able to have, to try to grasp something that i can never hold. joe was settling into his new cell after verbally abusing an officer, and he s got some good news. he s got his parole date. may 5th. cinco de mayo. i ve been doing this since 1981. in and out, in and out, in and out. nobody ever makes parole. they all come back, come back and discharge. you go right back out there again. you learn nothing. there s no rehabilitation in here. you know? you go right back out there and do the same damn thing over and over and over. without us, this man wouldn t have a job, so they need us. you know? that s really the real thing about it.
[ bleep ] stick it up your ass. i told you [ bleep ]. it was a mistake, and i corrected myself. mistake. if i m wrong, i always correct myself, joe. as joe is prepped to move into his new cell, deputy warden joni brown offers some words of wisdom to amy. you can go by the book, you can alter the rules, you decide how you are going to do your job, but you darn better make sure you do it the same way every single time, especially with somebody like that, because he s not going to forget. he s expected to parole next month. so i think a lot of it might be anxiety of he s been doing time since the riot days. all right, fellas. stay out of trouble like [ bleep ] me. i saw some pictures, some young pictures of me when i first come in.
all right. how you doing? i just want to get the hell out of the door. i don t want no more of these guys touching me or their little jewelry. joe, you re going to be transported by our transport officer directly to delancy street. i ve always gone straight out, you know, and never gone to a program. i m just going to have to take it day for day, you know? i don t want to have to rush into it right away. still, i know, i know that i put me here, but i still have a lot of anger towards these people, you know? i m requesting the shackles, chains. one last pepper spray. yeah! they re betting i don t make it.